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My Cheating Husband Begs, But I'm The Secret CEO's Now Novel Cover

My Cheating Husband Begs, But I'm The Secret CEO's Now

Clara Thorne gave up her university dreams to support Declan Vance, working a dead-end job while pregnant. But a glowing phone screen at midnight shatters her illusions: Declan has been spending their meager savings on a webcam site. As Clara’s abusive parents side with her hypocritical husband, demanding she endure it, she is left with nothing but a broken suitcase in the rain. Enter Jasper Sterling—a wealthy, enigmatic college student who is secretly a ruthless billionaire tycoon. He needs a personal assistant; she needs an escape. As Clara rebuilds her life and guards her unborn child, Declan's world crumbles. He realizes too late that the woman he discarded was his only salvation. But Jasper Sterling has already claimed Clara Thorne’s shattered heart, and this time, the price of Declan’s groveling will be his absolute ruin.
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Chapter 1

The phone was warm. That was the first thing I noticed — warm like it had just been held, just been used, just been set down seconds before Declan rolled over and started snoring.

I hadn't meant to look. I'd gotten up for water, and the screen was glowing on his nightstand, bright enough to cut through the dark bedroom like a blade. The browser was still open. He hadn't even bothered to close it.

Coomeet.

One-on-one video chat. Live. Random women. The interface was unmistakable — a split screen, a stranger's face on one side, a chat log running down the other.

My thumb moved before my brain caught up. I scrolled.

There were dozens of sessions. Dozens. Timestamps running back weeks, stacked on top of each other like evidence in a case I never knew I was building. My chest went tight. The air in the room changed — thicker, heavier, like the walls had shifted inward.

I sank to the floor. The hardwood was freezing against my bare legs, but I barely registered it. I kept scrolling.

February 7th. 11:47 p.m. A twenty-three-minute session with someone called *SweetNova*.

February 7th. That was a Tuesday. I remembered because I'd texted him at eleven asking when he'd be home, and he'd replied: *Still at the office. Don't wait up.*

February 12th. 1:15 a.m. Forty minutes. A different name. *Kira_online*.

February 12th was the night he told me the partners kept him late for a contract review.

I pressed my knuckle against my mouth. My stomach folded in on itself.

Then I found the billing page.

Virtual gifts. Real money. Roses, diamonds, little animated crowns — all purchased with the credit card linked to our joint account. Hundreds of dollars scattered across the month like confetti at a party I was never invited to.

Every late night. Every "don't wait up." Every tired sigh when he crawled into bed smelling like toothpaste and silence.

All of it — a lie.

The bedroom door swung open.

Declan stood in the hallway light, hair mussed, a glass of water in his hand. His eyes found me on the floor, then dropped to the phone in my grip. The water glass stilled halfway to his mouth.

"Give me that."

He crossed the room in two strides, reaching down.

I pulled the phone against my chest. "Don't touch me."

"Clara, it's the middle of the night. You're sitting on the floor holding my phone like a —"

"Like a what?" I looked up at him. "Like a wife who just found out her husband's been video-chatting strangers at one in the morning?"

His jaw shifted. I watched the calculation happen behind his eyes — the quick scan of what I might have seen, how much damage control he'd need.

"It's not what you think."

"Really." I turned the screen toward him. "SweetNova. Kira_online. Someone called BabyDoll_97. You sent her a hundred-dollar gift pack, Declan. On Valentine's Day."

He set the water glass on the dresser. His hand was steady. That bothered me more than anything — how steady he was.

"I have trouble sleeping," he said. "You know that. Sometimes I just — I go online to kill time. It's meaningless."

"Meaningless."

"Yes."

"You spent four hundred dollars in February on meaningless."

"It's a habit. Like scrolling social media. It doesn't mean anything."

I stared at him. The man I'd married five years ago. The man who'd held my face between his palms at the altar and whispered, *You're the only thing I'll ever need.* He stood above me now with the same mouth that had said those words, and he was calling this a sleep aid.

Something lurched inside me. Not sadness. Not yet. Something physical — a wave of nausea that started at the base of my throat and rolled downward.

"You're disgusting," I said. The words came out flat. Factual.

His expression cracked. Just a fraction. "Clara —"

"Every single night you told me you were working. Every single one. I made you dinner. I left it wrapped in the fridge. I texted you good night. And you were here — in our bed — watching strangers undress."

"I never met anyone. I never touched anyone."

"You think that matters?"

He crouched down, reaching for the phone again. "Just let me explain —"

I stood up. The phone burned in my hand. My fingers ached from gripping it so hard.

"There's nothing to explain."

"You're overreacting."

That word landed like a slap. I looked at him — really looked. The soft cotton shirt I'd bought him for Christmas. The reading glasses pushed up on his forehead. The face I'd kissed ten thousand times.

I raised the phone and threw it.

It hit the hardwood with a crack that split the silence wide open. The screen shattered on impact, a web of fractures spreading across the glass. Declan flinched. He actually flinched.

And then the broken screen lit up.

A notification. A new message, pushing through the spiderweb of cracks. I could read it from where I stood.

*Hey babe, you coming back tonight? I saved something for you 😘*

The username: *Mia_Luxe*.

Neither of us moved.

I watched Declan's face drain. Not guilt — panic. The kind of panic that comes when the last wall falls and there's nowhere left to hide.

"Clara, I can —"

"Don't."

I walked to the shattered phone, nudged it with my bare foot until it slid across the floor and stopped against his toes.

He looked down at it. Then up at me.

I was already turning away. The closet door was three steps behind me. I pulled it open, grabbed the overnight bag from the top shelf, and started pulling clothes off hangers.

"What are you doing?" His voice pitched higher. "It's two in the morning."

"I can tell time, Declan."

"You're not leaving. Not like this. We need to talk about —"

"We don't need to do anything." I shoved a sweater into the bag. Then another. My hands were shaking, but my voice held. "You need to figure out what you're going to tell yourself tomorrow morning when you wake up alone."

"Clara. Clara, stop."

I zipped the bag shut and slung it over my shoulder. When I turned, he was blocking the doorway, one hand braced against the frame.

His eyes were wet. I noted it the way you'd note a weather report — distant, irrelevant.

"Move."

"Please. Just sit down. Five minutes."

"You had five years." I stepped forward until we were inches apart. "Move, or I'll walk through you."

He dropped his arm.

I walked past him, down the dark hallway, past the kitchen where his wrapped dinner still sat in the fridge, past the framed wedding photo on the console table.

My hand found the front door handle.

Behind me, the broken phone buzzed again on the bedroom floor. Another message. Another stranger. Another night he thought I'd never find.

I stepped into the cold and pulled the door shut behind me.

The lock clicked, and somewhere inside, the phone kept glowing.

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